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Evidence that climate sets the lower elevation range limit in a high‐elevation endemic salamander
Authors:Evan H. Campbell Grant  Adrianne B. Brand  Stephan F. J. De Wekker  Temple R. Lee  John E. B. Wofford
Affiliation:1. SO Conte Anadromous Fish Laboratory, USGS Patuxent Wildlife Research Center, Turners Falls, Massachusetts;2. Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia;3. Shenandoah National Park, Luray, Virginia
Abstract:A frequent assumption in ecology is that biotic interactions are more important than abiotic factors in determining lower elevational range limits (i.e., the “warm edge” of a species distribution). However, for species with narrow environmental tolerances, theory suggests the presence of a strong environmental gradient can lead to persistence, even in the presence of competition. The relative importance of biotic and abiotic factors is rarely considered together, although understanding when one exerts a dominant influence on controlling range limits may be crucial to predicting extinction risk under future climate conditions. We sampled multiple transects spanning the elevational range limit of Plethodon shenandoah and site and climate covariates were recorded. A two‐species conditional occupancy model, accommodating heterogeneity in detection probability, was used to relate variation in occupancy with environmental and habitat conditions. Regional climate data were combined with datalogger observations to estimate the cloud base heights and to project future climate change impacts on cloud elevations across the survey area. By simultaneously accounting for species’ interactions and habitat variables, we find that elevation, not competition, is strongly correlated with the lower elevation range boundary, which had been presumed to be restricted mainly as a result of competitive interactions with a congener. Because the lower elevational range limit is sensitive to climate variables, projected climate change across its high‐elevation habitats will directly affect the species’ distribution. Testing assumptions of factors that set species range limits should use models which accommodate detection biases.
Keywords:climate change  cloud base height  competition  co‐occurrence  occupancy  range limits
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